Oh, those poor Chicago Bears. Caleb Williams’ last-minute interception ended his potentially historic streak, and the endgame left Bears fans in shambles. Topping off the madness, Thomas Brown claimed “no confusion” after the worst clock management you will ever see against the Seahawks.

Brown got his interim position because of Matt Eberflus’ epic clock meltdown, which led directly to his firing. This time, Brown couldn’t figure out when to call timeout, eventually hurting his team’s chances of trying a game-tying field goal in the last seconds of a brutally awful 6-3 loss.

That final score made it only the second NFL game this season without a touchdown.

Bears HC Thomas Brown goes wonky

Chicago Bears interim head coach Thomas Brown stands on the field after calling a timeout against the San Francisco 49ers in the fourth quarter at Levi's Stadium.
Cary Edmondson-Imagn Images

Chicago took possession with 5:12 left in the fourth quarter. The Bears stalled for a fourth-and-inches from its own 39-yard line and 2:14 remaining. A false start changed the narrative and Brown called the punt team onto the field.

Before the punt attempt occurred, Brown used his team’s first timeout to send the offense back onto the field. The backtracks laid hard and heavy as Brown tried to explain the silly situation, according to espn.com.

“It wasn't confusion at all,” Brown said. “I just changed my mind.”

Yep. You don’t get a free pass on that in the NFL. Coaches are paid handsomely to make quick and firm decisions. They don’t toss away timeouts trailing in the fourth quarter.

Brown continued, “I think being able to use (punter) Tory (Taylor) as a weapon, and we still had, I think it was, 2:16 on the clock, still had our three timeouts, plus the two-minute warning. The way our defense had been playing all day, possibly have a chance to go flip the field. And force the three-and-out. Get a shorter field and have, like, a last end-of-the-game drive. That was my thought process.

“Over the course of that, I changed my mind and said, ‘Let's go for it now.’ And sent the offense back on the grass.”

Oddly enough it almost worked. Caleb Williams hit D.J. Moore for a 6-yard gain. And the Bears eventually drove into Seahawks territory. But more madness ensued. Williams said he was hit in the throat on a pass to Rome Odunze. Before Chicago ran its next play on first down, 38 seconds ticked off the clock.

“I don't know if the coaches saw me down there after the big completion to Rome,” Williams said. “Even though I got hit in the throat and the face, got to just get up and go run down and snap the ball.”

Just a mess. Another fine Bears mess.